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Amenities |
Services, from the toilet in your own home to public transport. |
|
Aspect |
Refers to the location of the sun according to the site. |
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Bridging point |
A settlement built where it was possible to build a bridge. |
|
Burgess Model |
An urban land use model showing five concentric rings. |
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By-pass |
A road built to go round a busy urban area. |
|
Central Business District |
(CBD) The commercial and business centre of the town or a city. |
|
Central Place |
Any settlement that provides goods and services for smaller
neighbouring settlements. |
|
Clustered settlement |
Where housing surrounds a certain service. |
|
Commuting |
The process by which people living in one place, travel to another
place to work. |
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Comparison goods |
High order goods such as jewellery, antiques, etc. |
|
Congestion |
Lots of traffic. |
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Conurbation |
Where two or more cities have joined together. |
|
Convenience goods |
Low order goods which are inexpensive. |
|
Corner shop |
A small shop typical of the inner city. |
|
Cycle of deprivation |
A sequence of events experienced by disadvantaged people in which
one problem eg. Lack of work leads to other problems and so makes
things worse. |
|
Derelict |
Abandoned building |
|
Detached house |
A house standing alone. |
|
Dispersed settlement pattern |
Where buildings are not clustered around a particular point. |
|
Dormitory settlement |
A commuter settlement. |
|
Dry point |
A dry site in a wet region. |
|
Family life cycle model |
A model which is based on the movements of people within a city
looking for a better home as their personal circumstances get
better. |
|
Favela |
Shanty town. |
|
Function of a settlement |
What the settlement does to make its money. (a Market Town, mining
town …) |
|
Gentrification |
A process by which poor housing in the inner city is improved and
rehabilitated by richer people. |
|
Goods |
Products |
|
Green belt |
An area around a city, composed mostly of parkland and farmland, in
which development is strictly controlled. |
|
Hamlet |
Small group of houses. |
|
Hierarchy |
The ranking of settlements or shopping centres according to their
population size or the number of services they provide. |
|
Hinterland |
The sphere of influence of a port. |
|
Hoyt model |
An urban land use model showing sectors, based upon main transport
routes and social groupings. |
|
Industrial revolution |
The growth and development of the manufacturing industry and the
factory system which began in the UK in the 18th century. |
|
Inner city |
The part of the urban area surrounding the CBD, it often contains
older housing and industry. (twilight zone) |
|
Inner suburbs |
Surrounding the inner city. Housing often built in the 1950's. |
|
Linear settlement |
Settlement in the form of a line which normally follows a road or
railway. |
|
Loose-knit settlement |
A settlement with many gaps between building and with little pattern. |
|
New town |
A planned, self contained settlement complete with housing,
employment and services. |
|
Out of town shopping centre |
A large group of shops built on the edge of an urban area or on an
old industrial area. |
|
Outer suburbs |
Surrounding the inner suburbs. More modern housing. |
|
Overspill town |
A town that expanded by taking people who were forced to move out of
cities as a result of slum clearance and re-development schemes. |
|
Over-urbanisation |
Problem experienced in LEDCs where too many people migrate to an
urban area causing housing shortages, lack of sanitation, illness
and crime. |
|
Primate City |
Capital city. |
|
Range of a good |
The maximum distance people are prepared to travel for a specific
service. |
|
Resources |
Materials needed such as wood, water, coal, iron… |
|
Retail park |
Out of town shopping centre with large warehouse-type buildings
selling electrical goods, carpets, etc. |
|
Re-urbanisation |
The process where towns and cities in MEDCs which have begun to
loose population are able to stop this decline and grow again. |
|
Ribbon development |
When housing grows out of a town along a main road. |
|
Route centre |
A settlement located at the meeting point of roads, railways,
canals, etc. |
|
Rural-urban fringe |
Zone of transition between the urban area and the countryside. |
|
Semi-detached house |
A house joined to another. |
|
Semi-skilled occupation |
Jobs with few skills that can be learnt quickly, such as, cleaner,
labourers, etc. |
|
Shanty town |
Home made huts in poor countries - shacks (favela) |
|
Site |
A settlement's site is the land it is built on. |
|
Slum |
Poorly built housing, unfit for habitation, found in inner city
areas, in MEDCs, in the 19th century. Found today in LEDCs. |
|
Sphere of influence |
The area served by a settlement service or shop. |
|
Spontaneous settlement |
A shanty towns. |
|
Suburbanisation |
Where people, factories and shops move out of the city centres to
the suburbs. |
|
Terraced house |
A long line of houses. |
|
Transect |
A journey taken by someone (referring to urban geography). |
|
Transition Zone |
The inner city area where their is mixed land use such as derelict
buildings, factories, shops and housing. This area in MEDCs is
usually being redeveloped. |
|
Twilight zone |
The part of the urban area surrounding the CBD, it often contains
older housing and industry. (inner city) |
|
Urban Sprawl |
Unplanned and uncontrolled groth of urban areas. |
|
Village |
Has houses and at least one function, i.e. a church, a shop, a pub,
a village hall, etc. |
|
Wet point |
A site that has a good supply of water. |